Recently I began a thread about historical fantasy novels;well,this is another genre that I've developed an interest in.I'd like an alien invasion-type novel that:
Is a little "creepy,"but not frightening enough to give Arnold Schwarzenegger nightmares;
includes humanoid aliens,rather than animal-like ones;
and is of any length,so long as it's interesting.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

If you've got several days free, I can heartily recommend Harry Turtledove's Worldwar series, which mashes together an alien invasion, alternative history, and World War II without being a complete train wreck.

If you've got several days free, I can heartily recommend Harry Turtledove's Worldwar series, which mashes together an alien invasion, alternative history, and World War II without being a complete train wreck.

It's funny that you mention that series,because actually I just ordered the first book of the series on the Internet a few days ago.Does the whole series include basically the same subjects and the same characters,or do they vary widely from book to book?I was wondering because I was afraid that,with the series being so long,the plot might get stale by the end of the last book.

It's funny that you mention that series,because actually I just ordered the first book of the series on the Internet a few days ago.Does the whole series include basically the same subjects and the same characters,or do they vary widely from book to book?I was wondering because I was afraid that,with the series being so long,the plot might get stale by the end of the last book.

The WorldWar series (four books) all take place over the course of just a few years (1941-1945). So the cast is pretty consistent. The Conquest series (three books) takes place from 1963 to 1964. There are many characters who are holdovers from the earlier series and some new characters but the cast within the trilogy is again consistent. The final book, Homeward Bound, is something of an epilogue to the series and is spread out over several years from 1972 to 2031.

The very first instance that came to my mind was "Footfall".
In my opinion, it is probably the best written and most realistic-feeling alien invasion novel.
Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle have written many things together and this is in their top tier of great SF novels.

Hey,it looks like Little Nemo and Gagundathar posted suggestions for [I]Footfall[/I ]at almost exactly the same time.It seems like a very popular book in the alien invasion novel genre.But don't the aliens in that book look like elephants?

Hey,it looks like Little Nemo and Gagundathar posted suggestions for [I]Footfall[/I ]at almost exactly the same time.It seems like a very popular book in the alien invasion novel genre.But don't the aliens in that book look like elephants?

The aliens look like aliens. Quite frankly if you're looking for alien invasion books where the aliens look just like humans, you're probably going to end up reading in the bottom half of the genre. Better SF authors are usually going to try to make their books seem more "realistic" and that means they're often going to use non-human aliens.

The War Against The Chtorr counts because fingerbabies are humanoid. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

Anyone considering reading the Chtorr series should go in knowing that the series is incomplete and probably will remain that way. (The last book published was in 1993. The most recent update was apparently in 2004 when David Gerrold released the titles of the remaining three books. And told people to be patient.)

The aliens look like aliens. Quite frankly if you're looking for alien invasion books where the aliens look just like humans, you're probably going to end up reading in the bottom half of the genre. Better SF authors are usually going to try to make their books seem more "realistic" and that means they're often going to use non-human aliens.

Duly noted.The general consensus seems to be that it's a good book,so hopefully I'll get a chance to read it soon.Thanks for helping.

I recommend Highways In Hiding by George O. Smith. An oldie but goodie. An alien space organism invades Earth and things get very, very science fictional. You can legally download it for free thanks to Project Gutenberg.

If you've got several days free, I can heartily recommend Harry Turtledove's Worldwar series, which mashes together an alien invasion, alternative history, and World War II without being a complete train wreck.

You could read War Of The Worlds. You probably have already, but if not, you should. It's the granddaddy of them all.

I was going to suggest that.

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John Ringo's Legacy of the Aldenata series.
Four main books plus some side stories.
Very good military SF
Plus you can get all four books for free at publisher's website, Baen Books. The Wiki article has direct links for download. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legacy_of_the_Aldenata

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I would stick with just the first four set in the 1940s. The quality degrades from there. The Colonization books aren't bad per se but I am not sure I would recommend them and the epilogue novel is just bad.

An interesting take on the idea of an alien invasion is Roger MacBride Allen's Ring of Charon. In this book the aliens aren't arriving from anywhere else, they're already within the Solar System, it's just that humanity's actions have given the 'aliens' their wake-up signal.

This may well be outside the OP's limits for what they want to read - in a very real sense the largest part of the conflict between the humans and the 'aliens' is stunted and stalled, because neither side can easily get beyond their own preconceptions towards an accurate understanding of the nature of the other side. There are no 'alien' characters, for example, because the 'aliens' simply can't be thought of as individuals, let alone individuals that the audience could relate to.

One of the reasons I liked the book (and the follow-up, The Shattered Sphere) is that much of the plot hinges upon the protagonists answers to the questions, "What is life?" and "What is intelligence?"

I will second many of the recommendations here: Footfall, Worldwar, and The Legacy of the Aldenata (The invading Posleen are, IMNSHO simply the antagonists, not the villains of the piece. Though quite sufficient to give anyone nightmares.).

Some of my favorite books with aliens interacting with humans are post-invasion stories, where the war has been lost and the aliens have conquered. Timothy Zahn's Blackcollar books; Eric Flint and K.D. Wentworth's The Course of Empire* and The Crucible of Empire; and Gordon R. Dickson's Way of the Pilgrim.

*Link goes to the book's page in Baen eBooks' Free Library where, with the permission of publisher and authors, anyone may read online, or download, the ebook version of the volume.

I read http://variety-sf.blogspot.com/2011/08/fred-hoyle-john-elliot-for-andromeda.html A for Andromeda (pub. 1962) so long ago I barely remember it, but it obviously made a strong impression. Warning: the link points to a synopsis which may be an unwanted spoiler.

Last edited by twickster; 05-13-2012 at 07:16 PM..
Reason: broke link for site with malware reported

Anyone considering reading the Chtorr series should go in knowing that the series is incomplete and probably will remain that way. (The last book published was in 1993. The most recent update was apparently in 2004 when David Gerrold released the titles of the remaining three books. And told people to be patient.)

John Ringo's Legacy of the Aldenata series.
Four main books plus some side stories.
Very good military SF
Plus you can get all four books for free at publisher's website, Baen Books. The Wiki article has direct links for download. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legacy_of_the_Aldenata

He also co-authors the Looking Glass Series with Travis S. Taylor, which kicks off with an alien invasion when a scientists accidentally creates wormholes to "other" places, and he also has the Troy Rising series, which was partially inspired by Howard Tayler's Schlock Mercenary web comic.

Granted, the Troy Rising series never has a direct alien invasion on Earth, but the Horvath do KE strike three large cities by way of saying "High!" And then park a battlecruiser in orbit and say, "Nice planet you got there, monkey boys. It'd be a real shame if a rock or something dropped on it. Now, in exchange for our benevolent protection, let's talk about your stockpiles of heavy metals..."

This thread prompted me to go find the ebook so I can re-read it. Baen has it, DRM-free.

Baen doesn't believe in DRM, nothing they sell has DRM. That is why they get my money. Fictionwise can burn in hell. [Fictionwise has a bad habit of unlisting books, or whatever you call it. I bought 20ish Pratchett novels from them, and they no longer list Pratchett at all. Thankfully I backed them up to cd, memory stick and external HDD ...]

One to avoid: (this was posted by me on another board in a thread discussing the worst books we had ever read, prior to this my vote was for Ice Station by Matthew Reilly)

Quote:

Just found a new one:

Battle Earth by Nick S. Thomas.

Now I wasn't expecting much for $3 for the Kindle edition but I got even less!

First the title: Battle Earth......reminds me of something else......Battle Earth....Battle Earth......Battlefield Earth?!?........ Ahhhh there we go, this book is to literature what the Battlefield Earth film is to cinema.

Our hero(?) is one Major Mitch Taylor a hard-as-nails-officer-with-a-heart-of-gold who loves his men but has no problem insulting junior officers in front of their troops while sleeping with one of his (female) sergeants and, who seems quite unconcerned when his troops start getting killed around him.

Its a pretty standard Earth-invasion story, set a bit into the future - baddies show up & frag Mars base, invade (mostly) the Moon base and then push onto Earth.

A few high-points - every conversation carried out over the radio ends with "over and out." - I get the feeling Mr. Thomas learned radio procedure by watching TV.

A few days after (literally - I think this bit takes place two days after the aliens land) being invaded US scientists are able to remove the engines from two captured alien ships, bolt them to two of their own ships (again - literally - the alien engines are self-contained units, just connect your own control systems, kind of like an alien Ikea store I guess) and use them to do a high-speed re-supply run to the moon! - take that! Independence Day with your Mac virus delivery!

My favorite - instead of writing interesting or exciting dialogue, almost every conversation has people joining it or contributing to it, by shouting - really on almost every page someone shouts something at or to someone else - even meetings between generals to discuss tactics or alien technology. This device is, apparently, used to create excitement! and urgency! and demonstrate conflict! between characters! (the author also likes exclamation marks!)

There are also two sequels, creatively named Battle Earth II & Battle Earth III - no, I won't be reading them.

Last edited by Battle Pope; 05-13-2012 at 08:42 PM..
Reason: Must spell check.

If you've got several days free, I can heartily recommend Harry Turtledove's Worldwar series, which mashes together an alien invasion, alternative history, and World War II without being a complete train wreck.

You'd best be prepared to invest a lot of time in it, though. Turtledove's storytelling-style is usually unbearably tedious, like, "And then another locust came and carried away another grain of corn . . ."

Thanks for the heads-up. I was not trying to infect your machines, though as Andy L points out, the connection was eerily appropriate.

I run Avast and Firefox 3.6.28 with ABP, but my kids have switched to Chrome and, just now, I confirm it gives the warning. Maybe it's time I switched too. (FTR, as I understand the warning, it doesn't detect malware per se, but recognizes a linked-to site as being rated as malware.)

Anyway, OP asked for "humanoid" aliens so maybe my recommendation was poor anyway. Unless H. sapiens and its technology is considered "humanoid."

It's kind of opposite, in that it's humans discovering an alien planet and going off to it for a look see, but I found it pretty interesting: The Sparrow. A team of researchers travels to the planet to study and learn about its inhabitants, and things go wrong from there.

Anyone considering reading the Chtorr series should go in knowing that the series is incomplete and probably will remain that way. (The last book published was in 1993. The most recent update was apparently in 2004 when David Gerrold released the titles of the remaining three books. And told people to be patient.)

Gerrold's a reasonably healthy guy (as compared to, say, George Martin), so I still hold out hope. Besides, I donated a fair sum of money to charity for the privilege of having a gruesome death in the next book. In an odd way, Mr. Gerrold owes it to me to finish A Method for Madness.

The very first instance that came to my mind was "Footfall". In my opinion, it is probably the best written and most realistic-feeling alien invasion novel

I reread this recently, having loved it when I first read it in the 80's. With today's hindsight, it has aged really badly, with the cold war USSR people and plots and settings so ridiculously caricatured that it makes Rocky 4 look like a documentary in comparison.

I really loved Greg Bear's 'Forge of God' and 'Anvil of Stars', the first book being the invasion, with the sequel being our eventual retaliation.

I recommend the novel "Battlefield Earth" by L. Ron Hubbard (yes, THAT L.Ron Hubbard). The movie was not so good; I found the book quite entertaining. I think people stay away from the book because of the movie, but there's nothing wrong with the book.

At the risk of sounding like a total boor - I must disagree most vehemently with the previous poster's opinion of Battlefield Earth. I read it when it first came out, and I finished it because I was then still too young to realize that even navel-gazing was better than finishing dreck and life is too short to give to authors who wrote dreck.

It's a horrible, horrible book, that failed completely to make the bar of being able to approach suspension of disbelief. If you value your time, don't read it.